About the work of horror writer Laird Barron, and is a companion to the Laird Barron (ology) website http://lairdbarron.blogspot.com and collects the content found at the site. The various entries and elements can also be browsed there.
Barron as a writer often works in a Lovecraft type tradition, using his own Pacific Northwest and in particular Washington State mythos. Also noir influences.

In this collected works of bedtime stories and poems you will discover stories pertaining to a fantastic civilization of fairies that live around an ancient oak tree, an angel that guards a lake, and a cunning fox that lurks within a forest.
The poems include nature, and basic life.
You will surely enjoy this sweet and simple collection of stories and poems by Kelvin Baker.

"Scattered Shorts" is a collection of eleven short stories; there is something for everyone! A few kids' tales for the younglings, a tale of teenage angst, a touch of suspense, a sports story or two, and a piece of historical fiction for good measure.

Creative History-Collective Insites documents an innovative Australian project that brought together artists and historical collections. It will be of interest to artists, creative history students and curators interested in new approaches. The essay documents the processes of the project, and presents and discusses the artists' final exhibition work.

A short story collection by Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald.
Fantasy and science fiction from the best selling and award-winning team of Doyle and Macdonald: From humor to horror; realistic and fantastic; past, present, and future. Seven tales to amaze and delight.

Nine stories of the apocalypse, from the point of view of an ex-stock broker, a crow, a young girl, a soldier turned holy warrior, a club-going hipster, a nerdy street punk, a beige-wearing businesswoman, a sentient automobile and a being who incarnates every few centuries only to be killed and have to do the whole thing all over again. Extended version includes the novella The Alien Club.

TO BE held in cupped hands and passed around with wonder, the storied worlds of I’ll Give You Something to Cry About constitute a grouping born of spellbinding cosmic dust. Once more assuming the mantle of Story’s guardian, Corey Mesler sets to work at not only protecting and preserving, but pondering, playing, prodding, and perambulating within the bounds of narrative creation and exhaustion.